![A sunken boat dream has left a bad taste in this Tim Hortons customer's mouth](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7178054.1713472729!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/carol-evans.jpg)
A sunken boat dream has left a bad taste in this Tim Hortons customer's mouth
CBC
A St. John's woman says she won't be paying many more visits to Tim Hortons, after an email from the coffee chain led her to believe that she'd won a new boat — when she hadn't won anything at all.
"I go to Tim's quite a lot, seven days a week. I'm afraid now that's going to change to no days a week," Carol Evans told CBC News on Thursday.
Evans said she received an email from Tim Hortons on Wednesday afternoon while on a break from her work as an licensed practical nurse.
The email recapped the prizes she'd won in the annual Roll Up the Rim to Win contest, but there was one extra prize included — a brand new boat and trailer, valued at about $55,000.
Unfortunately, the excitement was over by the time she got home from work.
"I was just so excited, really excited. I thought I really won a boat and a trailer, $55,000 worth, and to find out at five to six, I had an email from them come in telling me it was a technical error," she said.
"I don't get my boat and I don't get my trailer."
Evans said her win was the talk of her co-workers.
"I work with about a hundred people in the run of a day, and more than that outside the OR, and everybody was so happy for me. They couldn't believe it, I finally won something in my life," she said.
"But to find out a few hours later I didn't, it was disappointing, very disappointing.… I cried, it was so sad."
Although she may not have taken it out on the water, Evans said winning would have meant a lot to her, like helping fund her retirement after more than five decades in nursing.
"I could have sold the boat and trailer and had some money, paid off some bills, probably could have, who knows, retired after 55 years of work," she said.
In an emailed statement to CBC News on Thursday, Tim Hortons said the message was meant to show what each customer won over the course of the contest — and the boat was included by mistake.
"We developed a Roll Up To Win recap email message with the best intentions of giving our guests a fun overview of their 2024 play history.
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